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Local Public Transportation Projects Receive $97 Million

California's Low Carbon Transit Program just announced grants to 152 local transportation projects to provide free and reduced fares, expand transit service, purchase zero-emission buses, and improve bus stops.
Local Public Transportation Projects Receive $97 Million

California’s Low Carbon Transit Operations Program just announced grants to 152 local transportation projects throughout the state. The awards include programs to provide free and reduced fares, expand transit service, purchase zero-emission buses, and improve bus stops.

The Low Carbon Transit Program is one of several programs aimed at helping reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It provides money for both operations and capital programs to help transit agencies improve services and options for getting around. These relatively small projects—a list can be found here—can help encourage people to take transit, as well as make it an even cleaner alternative to other modes.

One of the program’s priorities is to serve communities that have suffered from a lack of investment in the past. More than 130 of these projects claim to benefit disadvantaged communities in some way, either by serving or being located in one.

The size of these awards is pretty small compared to the amounts currently going out to highway projects around the state. And this list highlights the piecemeal way California approaches transit—as an add-on that exists to meet a few travel needs rather than as an integral part of the state’s transportation system that almost everyone can access and count on.

It’s only a start.

A few examples of the awards:

  • $33,038 for reduced fares for “targeted populations” using Yosemite Area Regional Transportation for access to sites such as Yosemite National Park
  • $696,048 for Sunline Transit Agency to offer free transit for college students in the Coachella Valley
  • $2 million for the Southern California Regional Rail Authority (Metrolink) to offer free tickets to “targeted populations” including youth and seniors
  • $350,000 to Fresno Department of Transportation to expand weekday night service and increase frequency on weekends
  • $294,816 for a new commuter bus between Chico and Sacramento
  • $433,364 for Santa Monica’s Big Blue Bus to improve service on several routes connecting to the Expo Light Rail
  • $3.9 million to the Santa Clara Valley Transit Authority to buy zero-emission battery electric buses and build charging infrastructure
  • $95,635 for the Madera County Transportation Commission to install bus shelters within the City of Madera, the County of Madera, and the City of Chowchilla
  • $173,830 to the City of Torrance to install solar lighting at bus stops in targeted communities
  • $138,222 to offer discounted Amtrak tickets between Ventura and Santa Barbara
Photo of Melanie Curry
Streetsblog California editor Melanie Curry has been thinking about transportation, and how to improve conditions for bicyclists, since her early days commuting by bike to UCLA long ago. She was Managing Editor at the East Bay Express, and edited Access Magazine for the University of California Transportation Center. She also earned her Masters in City Planning from UC Berkeley.

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